College Republicans ponder how to draw more young voters

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President Obama won 60% of the youth vote in 2012, compared to Romney's 37%. (CNN)

College Republicans ponder how to draw more young voters

President Obama won 60% of the youth vote in 2012, compared to Romney's 37%. (CNN)

(CNN) — “Solely for the rich.” “Lacking in diversity.” “Old-fashioned.”

That’s how young voters perceive the Republican Party, according to a new report by the nation’s largest Republican youth organization.

The College Republican National Committee released a 95-page study Monday detailing its study voters between the ages of 18 and 29, following President Obama’s sweeping victory among the voting bloc against GOP nominee Mitt Romney.

Obama won 60% of the youth vote, compared to Romney’s 37%, about five million more votes for the incumbent president, according to CNN exit polls. In 2008, Obama bested Sen. John McCain among young voters, 66% to 32%.

The new report comes just months after the Republican National Committee released its own internal review, which showed similar results in the perceptions of the party across wider demographics. The CRNC argues Republicans have scored well among youth in the past with Ronald Reagan and offered five target areas for which the GOP can refocus its messaging to attract a younger audience.

“The GOP absolutely can win over young people again,” the study states. “But this will not occur without significant work to repair the damage done to the Republican brand among this age group over the last decade.”

Respondents in the CRNC study said Republicans shouldn’t concede “caring” and “open-minded” to the left, with same-sex marriage being an issue of high importance.

According to the CRNC’s poll data-conducted by a right-leaning polling firm–a little less than half of young voters said that same-sex marriage should be legal nation-wide, while a quarter said that it should be up to states to decide. Only 30% said marriage should be legally defined as only between a man and a woman.

A large number said they were open to voting for a Republican candidate they disagreed with on same-sex marriage, with nearly four in ten saying it would make them less likely to vote for the candidate that opposed same-sex marriage.

“In the short term, the best course of action for the party may be to promote the diversity of opinion within its ranks (after all, for quite some time, former vice president Dick Cheney was to the left of President Obama on same-sex marriage),” the report states.

But the study finds that young voters want to focus more on economic issues than social matters. The GOP has to convince young people, the report states, that it’s the party for entrepreneurs and start-ups, not for those who have already become successful. Nearly half of young people say they want to start their own business one day, the study notes.

“We’ve become the party that will pat you on your back when you make it, but won’t offer a hand to help you get there,” the authors write.

But Republican messages on principle and big government may be hurting the party, according to the report.

More respondents said they would favor a candidate who used terms like “fixing the national debt” than candidates who used terms like “reducing big government” and “cutting government spending” to address the issue–with the bottom line being that “fixing” is a more effective word than “cutting” and “reducing.”

The Winston Group conducted the survey online in partnership with YouGov by interviewing 800 registered voters between 18-29 nationwide between February 27 and March 4. The CRNC also conducted focus of young Obama voters in California, Florida and Ohio.